jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 06/29/2020 - Country Music Hotspots?, BET Awards, Protest Music, West Coast Get Down, Phish, Curtis Waters...

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[Modern] hip-hop has been about escapism, to a certain extent. But the world doesn't lend itself to that right now. This might not be the time to escape reality—you need to be aware of what's going on.
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12-year-old Keedron Bryant opens a politically charged BET Awards by singing "I Just Wanna Live," June 28, 2020.
(BET/Getty Images)
Monday - June 29, 2020 Mon - 06/29/20
rantnrave:// "People go to bars to get close and to drink and to socialize," Texas GOV. GREG ABBOTT said, out loud, to a reporter, Friday night, as if he had just discovered this fact. This was a month after the governor of the second most populous state in the US had authorized the reopening of drinking establishments, an action he was now reversing in the wake of a pandemic that responded to that and similar orders around the country by—duh—getting significantly worse. "In hindsight," Abbott said, "it may have been better to slow the opening of the bar setting." Hindsight is, um, 2020. Lest you think only red-state governors swung and missed at this one, here's the governor of the most populous state, who had been the country's most aggressive advocate of a shutdown early on, doing his own reversal of a bar reopening order two days later (and here's the LA rock band BEST COAST LOL'ing at him). At least they and others were willing to put their hindsight glasses on, so thanks, I guess, for that. Meanwhile in Tennessee, country singer CHASE RICE, who three months ago posted a short ditty called "DEAR CORONA" in which he gave the virus both a middle finger and a "f*** you"—less the virus miss his point—decided this weekend was a perfect time to follow through on that song's promise that "we gonna show up, hold our drinks high, sing them songs about trucks and beer." Only about 1,000 fans actually showed up for Rice's Saturday night concert at the BRUSHY MOUNTAIN STATE PENITENTIARY (a shuttered prison now used as an event space), but a video he posted on his INSTAGRAM STORIES made clear that many or most of them weren't wearing masks and were crowded against the stage and each other. If you can think of a dumber way to bring live music back in this pandemic summer, my DMs are open. Country TWITTER wasn't having it. Indie-rock Twitter wasn't pleased either. (The show's promoter, which has more shows scheduled, is now in hindsight mode, too, telling BILLBOARD "we are re-evaluating the series from top to bottom.") Another country singer, CHRIS JANSON, was onstage the same night in Filer, Idaho, in front of about three times as many fans, also, reportedly, mostly maskless and not socially distanced. At heart, beyond the obvious denial, hubris and selfishness, what's going on here is a phenomenal failure of imagination. A failure to imagine that a deadly virus that you can't see, and whose carriers often don't display symptoms, is still a deadly virus. But also a failure to think creatively about how you *can* play live music in the face of that virus. How you can imagine new experiences that use social distancing not as an irritant to be ignored but as a challenge to work with. Why should a concert in 2020 play out exactly like a concert in 2019? Why would any performer or fan want it to? We've been freed, in a way, from that past and challenged to imagine a new future, or at least a new present. One where personal space is to be cherished and masks are cool... Sunday night's BET AWARDS, which featured pre-taped performances and acceptance speeches and a host, AMANDA SEALES, working at home in front of a green screen, was a surprisingly effective reimagining of an awards show for the pandemic era. A lot of that had to do with the way the show dealt with this season's other major challenge. The awards themselves were all but an afterthought in a show that was almost entirely a BLACK LIVES MATTER tribute, from DA BABY opening his performance of "ROCKSTAR" lying on the ground with a policeman's knee on his neck, to ALICIA KEYS playing "PERFECT WAY TO DIE" on a street painted with the names of victims of police brutality, to BEYONCΓ‰ accepting her humanitarian award (from MICHELLE OBAMA) by urging viewers to "dismantle a racist and unequal system." What was lost in the thrill of live performance and surprised winners was more than made up by the urgency of embracing a moment... RIP HUEY, MARC ORLEANS, FREDDY COLE, SANDRA FEVA, TOM FINN, GRAEME WILLIAMSON and MILTON GLASER.
- Matty Karas (@troubledoll), curator
1989 the number, another summer
Billboard
'There's An Awakening Going On': Inside The Protest Music Explosion
by Jason Lipshutz
As superstars and rising artists alike release songs about racial injustice, the music industry adapts to a more socially conscious moment.
NPR Music
We Insist: A Century Of Black Music Against State Violence
by Bobby Carter, Nate Chinen, Ann Powers...
These songs take on some of the ugliest stories in our history and reflect the commitment of Black musicians to telling the truth of how Black people have been wronged, and survived, and fought back.
Dazed Digital
The history of the West Coast Get Down, LA's jazz giants
by Thomas Hobbs
Kamasi Washington might have made the headlines, but the jazz collective he's a part of deserves just as much of your attention. This oral history explores how the group is only just getting started
Variety
Country Stars Chase Rice, Chris Janson Spark Outrage With Videos of Packed Concert Crowds
by Chris Willman
Country singer Chase Rice is taking heat after sharing video footage of a concerts he played in east Tennessee Saturday night, with footage showing large, packed outdoor crowds rocking out shoulder-to-shoulder with no sign of social distancing or masks.
The Ringer
The Time-Altering Joy of Phish in Quarantine
by Katie Baker
Somehow, the band known for crafting a signature live experience has found a way to remotely create a recurring, unifying experience for its phans.
Music Business Worldwide
Should music's biggest companies boycott Facebook?
by Tim Ingham
The likes of Unilever and Verizon are pulling ads in protest at misinformation and polarizing content being shared on FB and Instagram.
Vulture
U.S. Politics Should've Seen K-Pop Stans Coming
by T.K. Park
Those who care about the future of American politics should take note of the K-pop phenomenon in its own backyard.
Rolling Stone
Curtis Waters' 'Stunnin' Is a TikTok Hit -- And a Threat to the Major Label System
by Elias Leight
Waters is remaining happily independent as "Stunnin'" climbs the Spotify charts.
Los Angeles Times
At BET Awards, racial upheaval and COVID-19 add potency and portent to Black music honors
by Mikael Wood
The 20th anniversary of the BET Awards featured a host performing in front of a green screen and a protests-fueled update of Public Enemy's "Fight the Power."
The New York Times
A Met Opera Star Was Born, 'Then Everything Stopped'
by Anthony Tommasini
The mezzo-soprano J'Nai Bridges reckons with the challenges of the pandemic along with other freelance musicians, like the pianist Conor Hanick.
sound of the funky drummer
Synchblog
Gold Stream Guards: Is Livestreaming Sustainable?
by Eamonn Forde
Can livestreaming become an economically viable part of the music business in a post-pandemic world? Eamonn Forde investigates.
The Associated Press
Country music reckons with racial stereotypes and its future
by Kristin M. Hall
When country singer Rissi Palmer was working on her debut album, she wanted a song like Gretchen Wilson's "Redneck Woman," a song that would introduce her and tell her story to fans. On her 2007 debut single, "Country Girl," she celebrated her country roots while explaining that she didn't have to look or talk a certain way to call herself a country girl.
Africa is a Country
This artist doesn't want to sing for the Kenyan government
by Mwongela Kamencu
Government money, artistic freedom, and integrity in the time of COVID-19 in Kenya.
Los Angeles Times
Record label Die Jim Crow, dedicated to music by prison inmates, is toppling stereotypes
by Ilana Kaplan
Record label Die Jim Crow releases music by formerly or currently incarcerated musicians. It's raising money for COVID-19 protection in prisons.
Rolling Stone
'All I Can Say' Review: The Life and Death of a Rock Star, In His Own Words
by David Fear
A documentary on Shannon Hoon -- made up of camcorder footage shot by the Blind Melon frontman himself -- beautifully humanizes a rock-casualty story.
Billboard
As Protests Grow, Luci Murphy & The People's Music Network Ensure There Are Songs to Go With Them
by Steve Knopper
The 43-year-old organization that once counted Pete Seeger as a member, has seen its membership grow 52% in the wake of the pandemic and Black Lives Matter activism, yet it still struggles to attract younger members and people of color.
The New York Times
'We Can't Do Our Craft': Conductors Contend With the Pandemic
by Joshua Barone
With most orchestral concerts canceled, conductors have been largely invisible.
Afropop Worldwide
Remembering Tony Allen
by Banning Eyre
In this program we salute a towering career in global music, with insights from Michael Veal, co-author of "Tony Allen: An Autobiography of the Master Drummer of Afrobeat."
WBUR
Despite Successful Crowdfunding Campaign, Great Scott Will Not Reopen
by Jim Sullivan
Oak Hill Properties, the owners of the building where the rock club is located, has moved forward with a lease application from another prospective tenant.
Please Kill Me
Joni Mitchell: A Reckless Daughter's Brilliant Journey
by Scott Schinder
Joni Mitchell was a "folk singer" for two years, but she has been an artistic badass for more than half a century since then. Her pioneering work and enduring influence over the decades are, however, often reduced to that early image of the twee folkie.
MUSIC OF THE DAY
YouTube
"I Just Wanna Live / Fight the Power (BET Awards 2020)"
Keedron Bryant, Public Enemy, Nas, Black Thought, Rapsody, Jahi, YG
"REDEF is dedicated to my mother, who nurtured and encouraged my interest in everything and slightly regrets the day she taught me to always ask 'why?'"
@JasonHirschhorn


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